home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- from NO COMPROMISE web page http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/nocompromise/ :
- ---------------------------------------------
- ACTIVISTS CLAIM VICTORY
- AT HEGINS PIGEON SHOOT TRIAL
-
- July 22, 1997
-
- Pottsville, PA - Brett Wyker, 20 of Asbury Park, NJ and Dawn Ratcliffe, 24
- of Charlotte, NC were found not guilty of two charges, the prosecution
- dropped another and they were only found guilty of the smallest charge --
- disorderly conduct -- at their trial here Tuesday for participating in a
- demonstration against the killing of thousands of birds at the infamous
- Hegins Pigeon Shoot last September.
-
- Conspiracy, and trespassing charges were rejected by the 12 person jury,
- which took 3 hours to deliberate after 2 days of testimony. The prosecution
- dropped resisting arrest charges the day the trial began. According to an
- activist who was at the trial the affair received major media attention.
-
- Sentencing is Aug. 29, only 2 days before the next Hegins massacre, when
- hundreds of activists are expected to attend to protest the action again.
- The two refused to accept a plea bargain of a $500 fine, one year probation
- and not being allowed to go to Hegins during probation.
-
- Miscellaneous Updates
-
- Main Menu - Latest - Features - News - Fight Back! - A.L.F. - Commentary -
- Trenches - Links
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 00:42:55 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Cattle Slaughter Method Poses `Mad Cow' Risks, Group Says
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970726004252.006d6790@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Washingtonpost.com:
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- Cattle Slaughter Method Poses `Mad Cow' Risks,
- Group Says
-
- `Stunning' Possibly Scatters Brain Tissue
- Through Body
-
- By John Schwartz
- Washington Post Staff Writer
- Friday, July 25, 1997; Page A02
- The Washington Post
-
- A method used commonly to prepare cattle for
- slaughter, called "stunning," could let "mad
- cow disease" eventually enter the U.S. food
- supply, a consumer health group warned
- yesterday.
-
- There is no imminent risk to Americans because
- no cases of the fatal brain disease, also known
- as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), have
- ever been detected in the United States, said
- nutritionist David Schardt of the Center for
- Science in the Public Interest (CSPI).
-
- But a mid-1980s outbreak of the disease in
- British cattle has been linked to the deaths of
- more than a dozen people, and if BSE were to
- appear in the United States, stunning could be
- a route for its spread from cows to humans,
- Schardt said. He called the practice "a hole in
- the fire wall" protecting humans from the
- disease.
-
- Many scientists believe that BSE is transmitted
- by eating central nervous tissues, such as the
- brain, of infected animals. Meat packing plants
- take precautions to remove brain and spinal
- cord from edible meat to avoid the possibility
- of spreading the disease.
-
- But stunning might spread those tissues
- throughout the animal's body before butchering.
- The decades-old practice, designed to
- incapacitate cattle while protecting
- slaughterhouse workers, renders the animal
- brain-dead by sending a power-driven plunger
- through its skull. Because stunning is
- generally considered to be a humane way of
- preparing cattle for slaughter, some form of
- the procedure is required by the federal Humane
- Slaughter Act.
-
- The process, especially a pneumatic variant
- that follows the plunger with a blast of air,
- appears to drive particles of brain matter
- through the animal's circulatory system. Last
- year, researchers at Texas A&M University
- announced that they had found brain tissue in
- the lungs of as many as as 5 percent of cattle
- that had been stunned. At the time, the meat
- industry said that the findings did not have
- consequences for public health since Americans
- generally do not eat lung tissue.
-
- But new research by the Texas researchers and
- the Canadian government's Food Inspection
- agency has found bits of brain matter in liver
- and other parts of the body as well, Schardt
- said. "It splatters brain tissue, as it turns
- out, throughout the cow's body," Schardt said.
- Those observations, however, have not yet been
- published in a peer-reviewed scientific
- journal, so they must be considered
- preliminary.
-
- The more forceful pneumatic method of stunning
- is used by 75 percent of slaughterhouses that
- process more than 50 heads per hour, according
- to industry estimates. A recent review of
- stunning procedures by assistant professor
- Temple Grandin of Colorado State University
- suggested that the pneumatic process increased
- the probability of contamination, especially
- when the creature is stunned more than once,
- which she said "pulverizes the brain."
-
- The process is prohibited for kosher slaughter,
- although Grandin found that those procedures
- might pose their own risk of transmitting
- infection because they cause more "bloodsplash"
- than captive-bolt stunning. Grandin wrote that
- a slightly costlier method, using small,
- hand-held, cartridge-fired guns, improved aim
- and decreased bloodsplash. "If air injection
- proves to be the major cause, the problem can
- easily be eliminated by using a well-maintained
- cartridge gun," Grandin wrote.
-
- Representatives of the American Meat Institute
- and the National Cattlemen's Beef Association
- appeared at the press conference called by
- CSPI. Although neither organization
- acknowledged that the stunning process is a
- source of risk to humans, they did announce
- that they would sponsor a study on stunning
- that should be completed by early December.
- "The industry is committed to finding a better
- way if there is a problem," said Janet E.
- Collins, vice president for research at the
- American Meat Institute Foundation, in an
- interview. She added, however, that "Before you
- can make the statement that you have a problem
- here you have to have the data -- and I don't
- think that the data are good."
-
- Beef safety is regulated chiefly by the U.S.
- Department of Agriculture. The two beef trade
- organizations have asked the department to
- examine the design of the study and its
- results. "We agreed to review" the study, said
- Jacque Knight, a spokeswoman for the USDA's
- Food Safety Inspection Service. "Until we do,
- that's about all I think we can say right now.
- . . . We're always willing to look at
- improvements at the way we do things."
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 00:02:58 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Homeless Animals' Day - Correction
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970726000343.0937d310@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Whoops - forgot to put the date in on the original posting. Here is how it
- should have read.
- Sorry about that.
-
- David
-
- The Vancouver Humane Society will be holding a rally to commerorate Homeless
- Animals' Day outside Vancouver City Hall (12th Ave @ Cambie).
-
- Time: 2:00 PM
-
- Date: Saturday, August 16th, 1997
-
- Speakers include Councilor Nancy A. Chiaario, who will announce what
- Vancouver Council will be doing to address the companion animal
- overpopulation in the city.
-
- Other speakers: TBA
-
- There will also be a vigil in honour of the 1,000 dogs and 7,000 cats killed
- in Greater Vancouver's SPCA shelters in 1996.
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 02:47:17 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Labour MP and animals
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970726024803.0bffdcaa@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, July 26th, 1997
-
- Pet of the week
-
- IF Tony Banks, Minister for Sport, is late for a meeting, it is probably
- because he's been feeding Buzz, a reformed cat burglar who moved in with him
- about a year ago. Buzz, named after the Disney Toy Story character Buzz
- Lightyear, shares his home with Felix, another black cat, who also turned up
- as a bedraggled kitten, crying on the doorstep of the Minister's east
- London home.
-
- Animals in his constituency seem to know where to get help. For Banks, a
- vegetarian, is a devoted animal lover. He has stopped his government car
- several times to rescue wounded blackbird fledglings or one-legged pigeons
- this summer. "There's a pigeon upstairs at the moment. It's recovering well."
-
- If parliamentary hours permitted it, Banks would have a dog (cats are
- flexible enough to let themselves in and out with a cat flap).
-
- "They don't always use it. They've discovered that if they sit near the
- door, the alarm buzzer goes off and somebody has to come and let them in.
- It's no fun at 4.30am."
-
- Buzz used to sneak into the house and steal food. "He wouldn't let you come
- near him and you couldn't pick him up. Now he eats everything. He thinks
- that if he eats up all the food, there will be none for Felix and so Felix
- will have to move out and he'll have the house to himself. He wouldn't purr
- when he first came to us.
-
- Now he purrs."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 02:47:19 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Following in their fin strokes
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970726024805.0bffe222@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, July 26th, 1997
-
- Following in their fin strokes
-
- Satellite tracking is revealing the mysteries of our oceanic cousins and the
- depths to which they are prepared to sink in the quest for survival. Roger
- Highfield reports
-
- WHALES, turtles, penguins and an assortment of other creatures are
- travelling further and diving deeper than we ever thought possible. Gazing
- down from an orbiting satellite, biologists are now able to track epic
- natural journeys across the planet, providing the first detailed glimpse of
- the movements of many creatures that will be crucial for conservation
- efforts, as well as for establishing new wildlife records.
-
- This month, basking sharks join the long line of creatures that are being
- tracked during epic journeys by scientists from the comfort of their
- laboratories. One of the pioneers is Dr Tony Martin, who since 1983 has been
- developing tracking methods at the Sea Mammal Research Unit, based in St
- Andrews and Cambridge.
-
- Beluga whales are his specialty. Eskimo folklore has it that belugas are
- coastal creatures that rarely dive deeper than 20 metres and can hold their
- breath for only a few minutes. "Imagine our surprise then, when the first
- batch of tagged whales exceeded the maximum recordable depth of 300 metres,
- the second batch exceeded the revised limit of 500 metres, and then three
- belugas off Alaska dived to more than 1,000 metres," he said.
-
- "One dive to 1,170 metres is the deepest accurately recorded dive for any
- cetacean. What's more, we now know that this animal can hold its breath for
- around 21 minutes," he said.
-
- The reason for the record breaking V-shaped dives of more than 800 metres
- in the Beaufort Sea off north-west Canada is not known, though Dr Martin
- believes that it is probably to search the underside of ice to find the next
- breathing hole.
-
- No light penetrates to such depths, but belugas use sound to explore their
- environment. They may be able to listen for other whales in their direction
- of travel or for the tell-tale slop of water at a hole in the ice above.
-
- "If one is discovered, they could carry on; if not, they could turn back to
- the last one from the bottom of the 'V' - literally the point of no return,"
- he said. "They are going under ice in areas where no one, even the Eskimos,
- had any clue they could possibly survive."
-
- The work has shown that belugas spend most of their time foraging for fish
- on the seabed, so that the "beluga restaurant" extends to most of the Arctic
- basin floor. "We find belugas snuffling around on the seabed hundreds of
- kilometres from land," said Dr Martin, author of the book Beluga Whales.
-
- For other "races" of Belugas, there are quite different behaviours. Pods
- that migrate to Churchill, Hudson's Bay, have a much easier life. They spend
- the entire summer hanging around the river mouth, diving no more than 15
- metres to find food.
-
- The satellite-linked radio tracking data allows the team to recommend
- shipping routes to avoid critical beluga habitats. "The main populations are
- going to really quite tiny areas, where they feed exclusively on the
- seabed," he said.
-
- And the method allows team members to study belugas in some of the most
- remote locations. "Back home in the warmth of my Cambridge lab, my
- biologist's interpretation of a blip moving across a computer screen must
- surely be enhanced by knowing that it represents that gleaming white brute
- that bit my leg in a frigid Svalbard fjord a mere six weeks earlier," said
- Dr Martin.
-
- Similar surprises have been in store for researchers at the University of
- California's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, when 130 gram satellite
- transmitters revealed young Antarctic emperor penguins may range well beyond
- previously recorded boundaries. The species was formerly thought to live
- exclusively in an icy isolated habitat in the southern hemisphere.
-
- A three-year study by Prof Gerald Kooyman and colleagues found that
- fledgling penguins travel thousands of miles from their home in the Ross
- Sea, venturing north near waters that may be used by commercial fleets. "We
- found what I feel were astonishing results," said Prof Kooyman. "They were
- travelling so far."
-
- "It's very exciting but also really remarkable. These (juvenile) birds go so
- far north that they're in ice-free water and must be in the water constantly
- for weeks, if not months," he said.
-
- The juveniles travelled beyond the Ross Sea, nearly 2,000 nautical miles
- from the South Pole. The scientists are unsure why, although it may be to
- find upwellings in the ocean where food is more plentiful.
-
- The conservation provisions of the Antarctic Treaty extend only as far north
- as the 60th parallel so this study has revealed that the penguins are
- entering unprotected waters. With this new information, Prof Kooyman
- suggests the current boundaries may be too limiting to protect the emperors.
-
- Other valuable information for conservationists has come from transmitters
- tethered to leatherback turtles setting out across the Pacific from Costa
- Rica, in a study led by Stephen Morreale of Cornell University. Although the
- leatherback is the largest turtle, little is known about its marine
- behaviour, where it can range over distances of up to 60 miles a day and
- dive to depths of thousands of feet.
-
- All the turtles set off from the same beach once they laid their eggs at a
- nesting site near Playa Grande, and all headed in the same direction, along
- a 1,600 mile "turtle highway" pointing roughly towards the Galapagos Islands.
-
- "The existence of ocean corridors for sea turtles is important to the
- development of effective international conservation strategies," said Morreale.
-
- A similar study is now under way on green turtles by Dr Graeme Hays of the
- University of Wales, Swansea. Despite one unexpected problem - turtle
- lovemaking tends to knock off the transmitters - he has successfully tracked
- one individual from Ascension Island to Brazil, a distance of 1,500 miles.
-
- The turtles must complete the round trip, which takes eight months, without
- a single meal. Unlike the leatherbacks, which can feed in deep water, the
- green turtles feed only on sea grass found in shallow water off South America.
-
- "They don't stop day and night on that migration route, just keep on going
- 50 miles a day every day," he said. "They go like little wind-up toys."
-
- The satellite suggests that, at the moment, the turtle is resting for an
- hour or two at a time on the seabed, before rising to the surface for an
- occasional breath of fresh air. "'It is recovering from the trip," said Dr
- Hays, who hopes to use the technique to explore how the turtles navigate - a
- feat thought to rely on magnetic fields or wave direction.
-
- Conservation is also at the heart of another tracking study of the
- mysterious basking shark, the world's second largest fish, launched this
- month off the west coast of Scotland. This is the second attempt to attach
- four satellite transmitters to the backs of the fish - the fish eluded them
- when they first tried last year, said David Wilson, the Scottish Wildlife
- Trust's regional officer. "They all appeared after we left."
-
- The team will approach the fish from behind in a motor boat. A long
- aluminium pole will be used to attach the transmitter by a small dart. The
- transmitter will send measurements of water pressure, temperature and
- location via a French satellite to Durham whenever the fish surface.
-
- Basking sharks, once a common sight off the west of Scotland between June
- and October, get their name from their habit of basking on the surface with
- their jaws open, harvesting plankton. The team is hoping to discover whether
- the giant creatures, which grow up to 30ft long and weigh four tons, linger
- on the ocean floor over the winter months or travel farther afield.
-
- The ú20,000 project has been funded by Scottish Natural Heritage and will be
- run by Dr Mark O'Connell and Tim Thom of Durham University with the
- assistance of the Scottish Wildlife Trust. "No one knows whether they travel
- the world, or go into a semi-hibernation over the winter," said Mr Wilson.
- "We don't even know if the European population is an isolated one or
- interacts with others around the globe."
-
- Anecdotal evidence suggests that at the end of the 1980s there was a marked
- decline in numbers. "It is very hard to convince the statutory agencies that
- there has been a fall in numbers because the data is so hard to come by,"
- said Mr Wilson.
-
- "The powers that be need hard statistics and that is what we are trying to get."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 02:49:25 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Following in their fin strokes
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970726025011.2b0f4662@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- Annalise,
-
- Thought some of the info in this article might be of interest to you.
-
- I'll try to make it Saturday/Sunday - but no promises.
-
- David
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, July 26th, 1997
-
- Following in their fin strokes
-
- Satellite tracking is revealing the mysteries of our oceanic cousins and the
- depths to which they are prepared to sink in the quest for survival. Roger
- Highfield reports
-
- WHALES, turtles, penguins and an assortment of other creatures are
- travelling further and diving deeper than we ever thought possible. Gazing
- down from an orbiting satellite, biologists are now able to track epic
- natural journeys across the planet, providing the first detailed glimpse of
- the movements of many creatures that will be crucial for conservation
- efforts, as well as for establishing new wildlife records.
-
- This month, basking sharks join the long line of creatures that are being
- tracked during epic journeys by scientists from the comfort of their
- laboratories. One of the pioneers is Dr Tony Martin, who since 1983 has been
- developing tracking methods at the Sea Mammal Research Unit, based in St
- Andrews and Cambridge.
-
- Beluga whales are his specialty. Eskimo folklore has it that belugas are
- coastal creatures that rarely dive deeper than 20 metres and can hold their
- breath for only a few minutes. "Imagine our surprise then, when the first
- batch of tagged whales exceeded the maximum recordable depth of 300 metres,
- the second batch exceeded the revised limit of 500 metres, and then three
- belugas off Alaska dived to more than 1,000 metres," he said.
-
- "One dive to 1,170 metres is the deepest accurately recorded dive for any
- cetacean. What's more, we now know that this animal can hold its breath for
- around 21 minutes," he said.
-
- The reason for the record breaking V-shaped dives of more than 800 metres
- in the Beaufort Sea off north-west Canada is not known, though Dr Martin
- believes that it is probably to search the underside of ice to find the next
- breathing hole.
-
- No light penetrates to such depths, but belugas use sound to explore their
- environment. They may be able to listen for other whales in their direction
- of travel or for the tell-tale slop of water at a hole in the ice above.
-
- "If one is discovered, they could carry on; if not, they could turn back to
- the last one from the bottom of the 'V' - literally the point of no return,"
- he said. "They are going under ice in areas where no one, even the Eskimos,
- had any clue they could possibly survive."
-
- The work has shown that belugas spend most of their time foraging for fish
- on the seabed, so that the "beluga restaurant" extends to most of the Arctic
- basin floor. "We find belugas snuffling around on the seabed hundreds of
- kilometres from land," said Dr Martin, author of the book Beluga Whales.
-
- For other "races" of Belugas, there are quite different behaviours. Pods
- that migrate to Churchill, Hudson's Bay, have a much easier life. They spend
- the entire summer hanging around the river mouth, diving no more than 15
- metres to find food.
-
- The satellite-linked radio tracking data allows the team to recommend
- shipping routes to avoid critical beluga habitats. "The main populations are
- going to really quite tiny areas, where they feed exclusively on the
- seabed," he said.
-
- And the method allows team members to study belugas in some of the most
- remote locations. "Back home in the warmth of my Cambridge lab, my
- biologist's interpretation of a blip moving across a computer screen must
- surely be enhanced by knowing that it represents that gleaming white brute
- that bit my leg in a frigid Svalbard fjord a mere six weeks earlier," said
- Dr Martin.
-
- Similar surprises have been in store for researchers at the University of
- California's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, when 130 gram satellite
- transmitters revealed young Antarctic emperor penguins may range well beyond
- previously recorded boundaries. The species was formerly thought to live
- exclusively in an icy isolated habitat in the southern hemisphere.
-
- A three-year study by Prof Gerald Kooyman and colleagues found that
- fledgling penguins travel thousands of miles from their home in the Ross
- Sea, venturing north near waters that may be used by commercial fleets. "We
- found what I feel were astonishing results," said Prof Kooyman. "They were
- travelling so far."
-
- "It's very exciting but also really remarkable. These (juvenile) birds go so
- far north that they're in ice-free water and must be in the water constantly
- for weeks, if not months," he said.
-
- The juveniles travelled beyond the Ross Sea, nearly 2,000 nautical miles
- from the South Pole. The scientists are unsure why, although it may be to
- find upwellings in the ocean where food is more plentiful.
-
- The conservation provisions of the Antarctic Treaty extend only as far north
- as the 60th parallel so this study has revealed that the penguins are
- entering unprotected waters. With this new information, Prof Kooyman
- suggests the current boundaries may be too limiting to protect the emperors.
-
- Other valuable information for conservationists has come from transmitters
- tethered to leatherback turtles setting out across the Pacific from Costa
- Rica, in a study led by Stephen Morreale of Cornell University. Although the
- leatherback is the largest turtle, little is known about its marine
- behaviour, where it can range over distances of up to 60 miles a day and
- dive to depths of thousands of feet.
-
- All the turtles set off from the same beach once they laid their eggs at a
- nesting site near Playa Grande, and all headed in the same direction, along
- a 1,600 mile "turtle highway" pointing roughly towards the Galapagos Islands.
-
- "The existence of ocean corridors for sea turtles is important to the
- development of effective international conservation strategies," said Morreale.
-
- A similar study is now under way on green turtles by Dr Graeme Hays of the
- University of Wales, Swansea. Despite one unexpected problem - turtle
- lovemaking tends to knock off the transmitters - he has successfully tracked
- one individual from Ascension Island to Brazil, a distance of 1,500 miles.
-
- The turtles must complete the round trip, which takes eight months, without
- a single meal. Unlike the leatherbacks, which can feed in deep water, the
- green turtles feed only on sea grass found in shallow water off South America.
-
- "They don't stop day and night on that migration route, just keep on going
- 50 miles a day every day," he said. "They go like little wind-up toys."
-
- The satellite suggests that, at the moment, the turtle is resting for an
- hour or two at a time on the seabed, before rising to the surface for an
- occasional breath of fresh air. "'It is recovering from the trip," said Dr
- Hays, who hopes to use the technique to explore how the turtles navigate - a
- feat thought to rely on magnetic fields or wave direction.
-
- Conservation is also at the heart of another tracking study of the
- mysterious basking shark, the world's second largest fish, launched this
- month off the west coast of Scotland. This is the second attempt to attach
- four satellite transmitters to the backs of the fish - the fish eluded them
- when they first tried last year, said David Wilson, the Scottish Wildlife
- Trust's regional officer. "They all appeared after we left."
-
- The team will approach the fish from behind in a motor boat. A long
- aluminium pole will be used to attach the transmitter by a small dart. The
- transmitter will send measurements of water pressure, temperature and
- location via a French satellite to Durham whenever the fish surface.
-
- Basking sharks, once a common sight off the west of Scotland between June
- and October, get their name from their habit of basking on the surface with
- their jaws open, harvesting plankton. The team is hoping to discover whether
- the giant creatures, which grow up to 30ft long and weigh four tons, linger
- on the ocean floor over the winter months or travel farther afield.
-
- The ú20,000 project has been funded by Scottish Natural Heritage and will be
- run by Dr Mark O'Connell and Tim Thom of Durham University with the
- assistance of the Scottish Wildlife Trust. "No one knows whether they travel
- the world, or go into a semi-hibernation over the winter," said Mr Wilson.
- "We don't even know if the European population is an isolated one or
- interacts with others around the globe."
-
- Anecdotal evidence suggests that at the end of the 1980s there was a marked
- decline in numbers. "It is very hard to convince the statutory agencies that
- there has been a fall in numbers because the data is so hard to come by,"
- said Mr Wilson.
-
- "The powers that be need hard statistics and that is what we are trying to get."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 21:15:25 +0800
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Aquarium offers stroll into underwater world
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19970726211525.006a1cb8@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- China Daily 26th July 1997
- Shark! Look out!
- For a moment, I almost forget where I am, as the spotted zebra sharks and
- whitetip reef sharks lurking in the deep suddenly scuttle towards me.
- I lean forward to take a good look at the voracious creatures and
- accidentally squish my nose and forehead against the invisible plastic
- screen.
- That reminds me.
- I'm in the glass-tube tunnel of the Nanjing Underwater World, a new
- aquarium at the foot of Zijin Mountain to the east of the city.
- The transparent acrylic barrier is a mere 6 centimetres thick. Fish of all
- kinds and colours swim beside, around and above me. New acrylic technology
- enables visitors like me to be submerged in the mysterious underwater world
- of the sea, with its rich tapestry of marine life, without getting wet.
- Eyes and mouths wide open, visitors around me are overwhelmed when they
- first step into the 74-metre-long acrylic tubes. Their initial silence is
- immediately followed by a hum of excitement. For most of them, who probably
- have never been to the seashore, this must be an almost surreal experience.
- I know that to most of these inland visitors, the word "fish" only means
- something they eat for dinner. But here, for the first time, they learn to
- enjoy fish with their eyes instead of their stomachs.
- Since the aquarium opened to the public in January, it has drawn more than
- 600,000 visitors from the city and its nearby areas, including even
- Shanghai. With 15,000 fish representing more than 300 varieties, the 200
- million yuan ($24 million) investment by Singapore's Alliance Technology
- and Development Ltd (ATD) has become a must-see spot among the natural and
- historical tourist attractions dotting centuries-old Nanjing.
- As a result of a slight optical distortion, the fish look a little smaller
- than they actually are. So does a diver when he slides into the
- six-metre-deep water to feed the sharks. People watch, their expressions
- suggesting they find it all rather hard to believe.
- "It must be a robot," someone mutters. Others argue with the guide after he
- assures them it is a human diver.
- I thought of the Old Testament -- when Moses parts the Red Sea and leads
- his people across and out of Egypt. But I know most Chinese would probably
- be reminded of the Monkey King, a spirited character in ancient legend, who
- used to part the sea to visit the palace of dragons.
- Watching the diver swimming at ease beside the sharks was terrific. If
- instead of being a shark's prey man could be its playmate, there might be
- reason to believe that the world will find peace some day.
- My journey into the marine world actually began in a gallery where goldfish
- and tropical fresh-water fish of varied shapes and bright colours were
- swimming in aquariums set into the walls. Bubble-eye and lionhead goldfish
- were cruised languorously behind the glass. Their diaphanous tails swung
- like elaborate trains of lady's dresses.
- Most of the visitors were amused by the very name of the Kissing Gourami,
- which make contact with each other with their mouths. Onlookers explode in
- laughter when told that kissing is in fact the fish's special way of
- fighting.
- The Aba Aba has an interesting Chinese name -- nude-bottom fish. Its
- scientific name is Gymnarchus Niloticus. Its perfect swimming style and
- streamlined figure is sure to win the envy of human swimmers.
- An exhibition hall has some of the most treasured species of sea creatures
- on display. The hawkshell turtle often draws the most spectators. Weighing
- about 275 kilograms, it is the second largest marine turtle in the world.
- It is at home in most tropical and temperate seas around the world.
- Even though there are written descriptions of the fish, many of the
- visitors find it hard to believe they aren't fake, perhaps even made of
- wax. "It will take a long time for people to learn about the sea and the
- mysterious marine life there," said Guan Jing, who works for the aquarium's
- education department, which often arranges lectures for children. Free
- textbooks on marine life are distributed to them, and an expert lecturer on
- marine life is available.
- The aquarium integrates education and entertainment to bring profit to the
- community as well as to itself. Among the 600,000 visitors, 70 per cent are
- children from primary and secondary schools. For these curious youngsters,
- the aquarium is a top choice for an outing, and their parents are willing
- to pay for it.
- "I got to learn more about underwater life from the aquarium," Ren Wei, a
- primary school student, wrote in his assigned composition. "The pictures of
- marine life that I had seen in books came to life."
- In addition to the acrylic tunnel that provides visitors a panorama of
- deep-ocean life, a small pool allows children to get close to the fish.
- Here they are allowed to touch various sea creatures: starfish, lobsters,
- cat sharks. But I could only be a spectator.
- Most children shrunk at first from the ferocious-looking fish. But they
- soon became engrossed when encouraged and convinced that the fish would not
- bite them. Their shouts and laughter were constantly echoing in the
- underwater world.
- A king crab that looks like a plate was their favourite. The living fossil
- comes from the Devonian period, 350-400 million years ago. The guide told
- me that the king crab practices monogamy.
- A few steps farther, I found myself surrounded by lush tropical plants. A
- river ran alongside me to some unknown destination. A dilapidated hut, some
- undecipherable stone carvings and inscribed tablets led me to imagine life
- before the dawn of history. An explanatory plaque hanging above the exit
- told a tale of life along the riverside.
- "The ruined city is flooded," it explains, "creating a special habitat for
- the piranhas." Piranhas are dagger-toothed predators that swarm in some
- rivers of tropical South America.
- The story continued as did the river, and I followed. A crocodile rested on
- a rock beside his pool. Two salamanders, "baby fish," as the Chinese have
- nicknamed them, waited quietly at the bottom of a fountain.
- I was told they would become active at night and would leave the fountain
- to visit the other underwater life. To keep them in their own habitat, the
- fountain was covered with a net at night.
- "But the crocodile is active only when enjoying his dinner," said Guan. The
- crocodile is fed with small fish twice a day. Then visitors see how a
- crocodile moves about and swims -- and experience an unforgettable moment
- when the crocodile really sheds tears before gulping down its prey.
- "It is one of nature's vivid lessons," said Guan. "The weak are bullied by
- the strong and the small eaten by the big."
- After about 45 minutes, my marine journey ended. I believe that most
- visitors will share my feelings about the experience. They will come into
- the underwater world with a mixture of doubt and curiosity. And they will
- leave feeling delighted, with just a touch of regret for an experience over
- too soon.
- Author: Ji Tao
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 11:18:38 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Protetst Oakbrook Elephant Rides
- Message-ID: <01ILOVIDHGHU9OD9LB@delphi.com>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
-
- CHICAGO SUBURB PLANS ELEPHANT RIDES FOR FUNDRAISER
-
- Please speak out against exotic animal rides at an upcoming
- event in west suburban Chicago. Oakbrook Terrace is
- planning to provide elephant rides at a Run for Kids
- fundraiser on August 30. Let the organizer know that you
- oppose the use of animals at this event and urge them to
- cancel the animal acts. Mention:
-
- * Performing animals are often subjected to continual
- confinement, total domination, and fierce punishment.
-
- * Animals used in traveling shows are deprived of all their
- natural behaviors.
-
- * Elephant rides are extremely dangerous for both riders and
- viewers--many elephant rampages have resulted in deaths
- and injuries.
-
- * A human form of tuberculosis is spreading rapidly among
- captive elephants and to people exposed to them.
-
- Please call or write as soon as possible! Contact:
-
- Cathy Caldarazzo, Tourism Director
- City of Oakbrook
- Department of Tourism
- 17 W 261 Butterfield Rd.
- Oakbrook Terrace, IL 60181
- phone) 630/941-8300 fax) 630/941-7254
-
- ==============================
- Debbie Leahy
- Illinois Animal Action
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- 630/393-2935
- ==============================
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 12:22:51 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Icare87855@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: MikeM@fund.org
- Subject: President of 2002 Olympics is big game killer, etc.
- Message-ID: <970726122250_1592011123@emout20.mail.aol.com>
-
- USA Today, Thursday, 6/24/97
-
- Salt Lake City - Tom Welch is cutting short an African safari to meet with
- Olympic officials Wednesday, when they'll discuss his future as president of
- the Salt Lake Organizing Committee.
-
- He is expected to return with his son today from the elephant hunting
- expedition to face a charge of domestic violence battery, a class B
- misdemeanor, based on allegations he bruised and restrained his wife, Alma
- Welch, during an argument July 9.
-
- A court date is not set. Welch's lawyer, Max Wheeler, said he spoke with
- Welch on Tuesday, the day the committee called for the special meeting that
- will take place behind closed doors.
-
- "He was unaware of the whole firestorm surrounding this and was quite
- surprised," Wheeler said Wednesday.
-
- Welch, 52, the mainstay of the original Olympic bid team since 1985, began
- receiving his $325,000 a year salary after Salt Lake won the bid in 1995.
- Before his Olympic involvement, he was a corporate attorney for Smith's Food
- and Drug, a large regional supermarket chain.
-
- Welch denied to Wheeler there was "a physical assault." Alma Welch told
- police that her husband threw her into a wall and put her in a "headlock"
- during an argument over her husband's relationship with another woman.
-
- Wheeler said Welch expressed concern for the effects of the incident on his
- family. The couple has six children and are expecting their first grandchild
- soon.
-
- Police were dispatched to the Welch residence again Monday afternoon after a
- heated argument between Alma Welch and two of her adult children.
-
- By Lisa Riley Roche
- Special for USA TODAY
-
-
- Date: Saturday, July 26, 1997
- From: propaw@ix.netcom.com (Aaron Medlock)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org (POSTING)
- Subject: CA Volunteers Needed For Ballot Measure
- Message-ID: <199707261632.LAA03238@dfw-ix8.ix.netcom.com>
-
- CALIFORNIA VOLUNTEERS NEEDED TO COLLECT
- SIGNATURES FOR WILDLIFE PROTECTION BALLOT MEASURE!
-
- Protect Pets and Wildlife (ProPAW), the political committee
- organizing the campaign in California to ban cruel traps and poisons,
- needs volunteers who are registered to vote in California to circulate
- petitions and gather signatures from mid-September through
- mid-February. More than 650,000 signatures must be collected during
- this five-month period.
-
- If enough signatures are gathered, California voters will have the
- opportunity to vote "yes" in November 1998 to ban the use of the
- steel-jawed leghold trap; to ban the use of any body-gripping trap
- (including snares and Conibears) for the purposes of recreation or
- commerce in fur; to ban the selling of pelts taken in the state with
- any body-gripping trap; and to ban the use of Compound 1080 and sodium
- cyanide (commonly used in M-44s).
-
- If you are a REGISTERED CALIFORNIA VOTER and can help collect
- signatures for this campaign, please respond to this email and provide
- ProPAW with the following information:
-
- YOUR NAME
- YOUR MAILING ADDRESS
- YOUR DAY and EVENING TELEPHONE NUMBERS
-
- You will be added to a growing list of volunteers who want to make
- a difference for wildlife, and you will receive a signature-gathering
- packet of official petitions and instructions in a few weeks.
-
- If you are NOT REGISTERED TO VOTE but live in California and want
- to help, please respond with the same information as above and let us
- know how you can help. For instance:
-
- -- coordinating volunteers at a particular location, or in a town
- or city;
- -- volunteering at our soon-to-be-opened Los Angeles office;
- -- organizing a fund-raising event;
- -- monitoring your local newspaper and sending relevant clippings
- to ProPAW;
- -- obtaining endorsements of the ProPAW initiative from local
- animal protection, environmental, political, religious, civic or social
- groups.
-
- Protect Pets and Wildlife is sponsored by the American Society for
- the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Animal Protection Institute,
- The Ark Trust, Doris Day Animal League, The Fund for Animals, The
- Humane Society of the United States, and the International Fund for
- Animal Welfare. Aaron Medlock is the ProPAW campaign manager.
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 13:56:50 -0400 (EDT)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Decorating with Trophy Deer Heads
- Message-ID: <970726135649_1658663839@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- This question and answer appeared in the real estate section
- of an Okla. City newspaper:
-
- No dear; No deer allowed
-
- Q: My son has shot his first deer (we live in Vermont and hunting
- is a way of life up here). We have most of the deer in the freezer;
- but my husband had the head mounted and wants to hang it over
- the fireplace. I'm not really keen on the idea -- from a design point
- of view only. Our living room is country but not rustic. I'm afraid
- a trophy would just look tacky. What do you think?
-
- A: See if you can't talk that deer head into the family room or front
- hall, if it really upsets your decor. But as long as you put the rest
- of the deer to good use, I say don't give "tacky" another thought.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 11:10:39 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Apology
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970726111126.2b1f66ee@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Seems like after been off-line for a couple of weeks, I've become a little
- rusty. Please ignore my second posting on "Following in their fin strokes."
- This was not meant to be sent to the list.
-
- Sorry for any inconvenience. (My only excuse is that I just waded through
- about 400 e-mails yesterday.)
-
- David
-
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 1997 16:30:39 -0400
- From: SHELTON WALDEN <WALDENSPOND@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: WALDEN'S POND RADIO PROGRAMS
- Message-ID: <33DA5E6F.19EE@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- GREETINGS!
-
-
- WALDEN'S POND RADIO PROGRAMS NOW AVAILABLE!
-
-
- The best of "Walden's Pond", the weekly radio program on animal
- rights, human rights, veganism, and the environment, are now available
- to you.
-
- Since 1989, "Walden's Pond" has broadcast programs on such topics as
- mad-cow disease, human genital mutilation, vaccinations, hunting,
- men's rights, women's rights, and other social and political issues.
- Featured guests have been Alice Walker, Gary Francione, Howard Lyman,
- and many others. "Walden's Pond" is available on audio cassette and/or
- transcript at 1 888 31 RADIO, or call or fax at 212 864 4206/662 3385.
-
- Write to:
-
- Walden's Pond Productions
- P.O. Box 20605
- New York, New York 10025-1515
-
- </pre>
- <!-- END OF PAGE CONTENT -->
-
- </TD>
-
-
- <TD width=50 align=center>
-
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
- <!-- THE BOTTOM TOOLBAR -->
-
- <TR>
-
- <TD colspan=3 align=center fontsize=2>
- <a href="../SUB~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/sub.html">ARRS Tools</a> |
- <a href="../NEWSPA~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/newspage.html">News</a> |
- <a href="../ORGS~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Orgs.html">Orgs</a> |
- <a href="../SEARCH~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/search.html">Search</a> |
- <a href="../SUPPOR~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Support.html">Support</a> |
- <a href="../ABOUT/INDEX.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/about">About the ARRS</a> |
- <a href="mailto:arrs@envirolink.org">Contact ARRS</a>
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
-
- <!-- END OF MAIN -->
-
- </TABLE></center>
-
-
-
-
- <!-- THE UNDERWRITERS -->
-
- <table border=0 width=100%>
- <tr><td>
-
- <center> <hr width=285>
- <Font Size=1>THIS SITE UNDERWRITTEN IN PART BY:</FONT>
- <BR>
-
-
- <a href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs22.htm#2209" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/cgi-bin/show_support.pl?id=t891020770&sec=sbn_bottom&url=http%3a//www.outpost.com" target=_top><img src="../../SUPPORT/BANNERS/OTHERS/CYBERIAN/PLAYMORE.GIF" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/support/banners/others/cyberian/Playmore.gif" border=1 alt="Cyberian Outpost"></a>
-
-
- <hr width=285>
-
- <br><font size=2>
- <b>The views and opinions expressed within this page are not
- necessarily those of the <br>EnviroLink Network nor the Underwriters. The views
- are those of the authors of the work.</b></font>
- </center>
- </td></tr>
-
- </table>
-
- </BODY>
-
- </HTML>
-